Allen v. Laudahn

81 P.2d 734, 59 Idaho 207, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 48
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1938
DocketNo. 6533.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 81 P.2d 734 (Allen v. Laudahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Laudahn, 81 P.2d 734, 59 Idaho 207, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 48 (Idaho 1938).

Opinion

*210 BUDGE, J.

This is an action brought by respondent to quiet title to certain mining claims in what is known as the Deer Creek Mining District, located in Nez Perce and Lewis counties. Both parties concede that their rights are subject to the paramount title of the United States.

It may be Avell at the outset to call attention to the fact that respondent Allen and appellant Laudahn are the only parties before this court, other matters in this litigation concerning various defendants and cross-complainants having been disposed of in the trial court.

Upon issues joined by the amended and supplemental complaint of respondent and the answers and cross-complaint of appellant the case came on for trial before the court without a jury and after appellant rested her case respondent made a motion for nonsuit which motion was granted as to the cross-complaint of appellant.

The material question for determination is contained in the follovring statement taken from respondent’s brief:

“Respondent Allen went into possession and located the ground in controversy, not because he thought the claims had been abandoned or that no assessment work had been performed on them and they were subject to forfeiture, but because he hacl tmdispu,table proof that valid mining locations covering the ground in question had never been created by McNeish under the 1928-1931 pretended location or the 1933 pretended locations.” (Emphasis inserted.)

In other Avords, if Ave understand respondent’s position, it is that McNeish made no valid discovery or location of the claims in controversy, either in 1928, ’31 or ’33.

The facts are substantially as follows: Prior to 1920 the Deer Creek Mining & Milling Company Avas the owner, subject to paramount title of the United States of a group of mining claims embracing the ground in dispute in this action. This corporation expended large sums of money in development and improvement, constructed a mill, flume, buildings, concentration machinery, and tunnels and worked said claims *211 as a group or unit, of lode mining claims. In 1920, the Deer Creek Company failed to do the annual assessment work on the claims and abandoned the same. In August, 1928, Mc-Neish and one Johnson located the Ajax, Orion and Bison claims, and duly and regularly filed notices of location of said claims with the county recorder of Nez Perce county. On June 11th, 14th, and 16th, and July 13th, 14th, 15th and 17th, McNeish alone located twelve further claims adjacent to and a part of the group of claims involved herein, and duly and regularly filed notices of location of said claims with the county recorder of Nez Perce county. All of the foregoing claims were upon the ground included in the claims of the Deer Creek Mining & Milling Company. Johnson who joined with McNeish in the location of the Ajax, Orion and Bison was not a party to this action and it is quite evident from the record that he claims no further interest in the mining claims involved. On January 19, 1933, McNeish, by mining deeds, conveyed to appellant an undivided three-fourths interest in all of the mining claims heretofore referred to, located by himself alone and himself and Johnson, pursuant to a contract theretofore entered into. There is evidence to the effect that appellant and McNeish expended for assessment and development work on the mining claims, the same being worked as a group or unit, more than $100 for each claim, completing the assessment work for the year ending June 30, 1933. There is evidence to the effect that appellant employed one Baker, Davis and Emick, an engineer, who, together with McNeish, did the assessment work for 1933. McNeish resided on these claims, had done so for a good many years, and was still living and making his home at the mining claims at the time of the trial of this action. There is evidence that McNeish agreed to make and file the proofs of labor for the year 1933, prior to July 1st, which proof, as to appellant, McNeish however failed to make and file. In July, 1933, McNeish became associated with one Morrell and one Hansen, the three attempting to file another location on each and all of the claims involved, the same lines being used and the names of the claims being changed; Mc-Neish representing to Morrell and Hansen that the claims had been abandoned and were subject to relocation by reason of *212 the fact that proof of labor* for the year ending June 30, 1933, had not been filed. There is evidence McNeish, Morrell and Hansen did work on said mining claims as a group or unit during the fall of 1933 and the early months of 1934, to the extent of more than $100 for each of said claims. In April, 1934, appellant employed and sent men to the mining claims to do the assessment work for the year ending June 30, 1934. These men were informed by McNeish that appellant had no interest in the claims for the reason that proof of labor for the preceding year had not been filed and that he, Morrell and Hansen had relocated them in their own names, and that neither appellant nor her employees could come upon the claims nor do any work thereon. Such seems to have been about the situation when on July 16, 1934, respondent fell in with McNeish, and, as a result of conversations with McNeish and visits to the claims, Allen on August 30, 1934, after having the claims surveyed, attempted to locate the same, changed the names of the claims, used almost the identical lines of the former claims, filed his location notices in the county recorder’s offices of both Nez Perce and Lewis counties, and thereafter brought this action to quiet title to the mining claims.

Respondent’s motion for nonsuit, made after appellant rested her case on her cross-complaint, which motion was granted, recited: (1) That the evidence wholly failed to show a valid discovery had been made on the mining claims described in appellant’s cross-complaint, and notices of location introduced in evidence; (2) That the evidence failed to show the boundaries of the mining claims duly marked as required by Idaho statutes; (3) That the evidence failed to show that the mining claims mentioned in the cross-complaint conflicted with the claims of respondent. The court granted the motion, dismissed appellant’s cross-complaint with prejudice and entered judgment in favor of respondent, quieting his title in all of the claims here in controversy, save and except as against the United States.

To undertake to recite at length the testimony of the various witnesses offered for the purpose of showing or tending to show a valid discovery, marking of the boundaries and a valid location of the mining claims by McNeish alone and by *213 McNeish and Johnson, prior to the filing of their location notices in the recorder’s office would make this opinion too lengthy. In this connection, however, it might be said that when respondent went to the mining claims, evidently for the purpose of making an investigation and to obtain all of the facts in connection with the location of these claims by Mc-Neish and Johnson and McNeish, he learned that they had been formerly located. He was taken by McNeish over the mining claims involved; they were pointed out to him, and subsequently he located identical ground changing the names of the claims.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P.2d 734, 59 Idaho 207, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-laudahn-idaho-1938.